The computer-modeled forensic facial reconstruction of German composer Johann Sebastian Bach, who lived from 1685-1750, is on display during a news conference in Berlin, Germany, Monday, March 3, 2008. The reconstructed face of Bach will be the centerpiece of an exhibition on Bach in the Bach Museum at his birthplace Eisenach,Germany, from March 21-November 9, 2008. At left is Caroline Wilkinson of the university of Dundee, Scotland, who created the reconstruction, at right is Joerg Hansen, director of the Bach museum. A modern reconstruction of Johann Sebastian Bach's head using state-of-the-art computer modeling techniques shows the composer as a strong-jawed man with a slight underbite, his large head topped with short, silver hair. The bust, unveiled in Berlin on Monday, was created by anthropologist Caroline Wilkinson in her lab at the University of Dundee in Scotland.

A modern reconstruction of Johann Sebastian Bach's head using state-of-the-art computer modeling techniques shows the composer as a strong-jawed man with a slight underbite, his large head topped with short, silver hair.
The bust, unveiled in Berlin on Monday, was created by anthropologist Caroline Wilkinson in her lab at the University of Dundee in Scotland.
Rather than use Bach's actual bones, which are buried at the St. John's Church in Leipzig, Wilkinson worked from a copper replica of Bach's skull made for a previous reconstruction in 1894, done nearly 150 years after his death by a physician and a sculptor, Carl Ludwig Seffner.
Nonetheless, Wilkinson sees her work as the most realistic rendering of Bach's appearance to date.
''The science has improved over the last 100 years,'' she said. ''We have a better understanding of the relation between hard and soft tissue.''
The project was commissioned by the Bach House museum in the central German city of Eisenach, as the centerpiece of a new exhibition: ''Bach Through the Mirror of Medicine.''
Bach's appearance has long been surrounded by mystery. Images of the prolific composer are plentiful - the Bach House alone has 140 likenesses - but he is only known to have sat for one portrait, museum director Jörg Hansen said.
''Of course, we have a large collection of his music,'' Hansen said, ''but people also want to know what he looked like.''
Because of the lack of material to work with, even Wilkinson admits that some aspects of the final product involved guesswork.
''There's no way to know on the basis of his skull what his skin tone would have been,'' she said. ''But, that's also something that would have changed with the temperature or the state of his emotions.''
The bust will be on display at Berlin's Charite medical school for a short time before being moved to Eisenach for the exhibition opening March 21 to mark the composer's birthday. Bach was born in Eisenach in 1685 and died in Leipzig in 1750.

Measures:

40 centimeters high

Creator:

Creator: Caroline Wilkinson of the University of Dundee, Scotland
Year: 2008